Morning dawned on a scene of pastoral grandeur. The valley of the
North Platte was dotted with cattle from hill and plain. The
river, well confined within its low banks, divided an unsurveyed
domain of green-swarded meadows like a boundary line between vast
pastures. The exodus of cattle from Texas to the new Northwest
was nearing flood-tide, and from every swell and knoll the
solitary figure of the herdsman greeted the rising sun.
Sponsilier and I had agreed to rejoin our own outfits at the
first opportunity. We might have exchanged places the evening
before, but I had a horse and some ammunition at Dave's camp and
was just contentious enough not to give up a single animal from
my own mount. On the other hand, Mr. Dave Sponsilier would have
traded whole remudas with me; but my love for a good horse was
strong, and Fort Buford was many a weary mile distant. Hence
there was no surprise shown as Sponsilier rode up to his own
wagon that morning in time for breakfast. We were good friends
when personal advantages did not conflict, and where our
employer's interests were at stake we stood shoulder to shoulder
like comrades. Yet Dave gave me a big jolly about being daffy
over my horses, well knowing that there is an indescribable
nearness between one of our craft and his own mount. But warding
off his raillery, just the same and in due time, I cantered away
on my own horse.
As I rode up the North Fork towards my outfit, the attached herd
was in plain view across the river. Arriving at my own wagon, I
saw a mute appeal in every face for permission to go to town, and
consent was readily granted to all who had not been excused on a
similar errand the day before. The cook and horse-wrangler were
included, and the activities of the outfit in saddling and
getting away were suggestive of a prairie fire or a stampede. I
accompanied them across the river, and then turned upstream to my
brother's camp, promising to join them later and make a full day
of it. At Bob's wagon they had stretched a fly, and in its shade
lounged half a dozen men, while an air of languid indolence
pervaded the camp. Without dismounting, I announced myself as on
the way to town, and invited any one who wished to accompany me.
Lovell and Reed both declined; half of Bob's men had been excused
and started an hour before, but my brother assured me that if I
would wait until the deposed foreman returned, the latter's
company could be counted on. I waited, and in the course of half
an hour the trail boss came back from his cattle. During the
interim, the two old cowmen reviewed Grant's siege of Vicksburg,
both having been participants, but on opposite sides. While the
guest was shifting his saddle to a loaned horse, I inquired if
there was anything that I could attend to for any one at
Ogalalla. Lovell could think of nothing; but as we mounted to
start, Reed aroused himself, and coming over, rested the stub of
his armless sleeve on my horse's neck, saying:
"You boys might drop into the sheriff's office as you go in and
also again as you are starting back. Report the cattle as having
spent a quiet night and ask Phillips if he has any word for me."
Turning to the trail boss he continued: "Young man, I would
suggest that you hunt up your employer and have him stir things
up. The cattle will be well taken care of, but we're just as
anxious to turn them back to you as you are to receive them. Tell
the seller that it would be well worth his while to see Lovell
and myself before going any farther. We can put him in possession
of a few facts that may save him time and trouble. I reckon
that's about all. Oh, yes, I'll be at this wagon all evening."
My brother rode a short distance with us and introduced the
stranger as Hugh Morris. He proved a sociable fellow, had made
three trips up the trail as foreman, his first two herds having
gone to the Cherokee Strip under contract. By the time we reached
Ogalalla, as strong a fraternal level existed between us as
though we had known each other for years. Halting for a moment at
the sheriff's office, we delivered our messages, after which we
left our horses at the same corral with the understanding that we
would ride back together. A few drinks were indulged in before
parting, then each went to attend to his own errands, but we met
frequently during the day. Once my boys were provided with funds,
they fell to gambling so eagerly that they required no further
thought on my part until evening. Several times during the day I
caught glimpses of Tolleston, always on horseback, and once
surrounded by quite a cavalcade of horsemen. Morris and I took
dinner at the hotel where the trio of government jobbers were
stopping. They were in evidence, and amongst the jolliest of the
guests, commanding and receiving the best that the hostelry
afforded. Sutton was likewise present, but quiet and
unpretentious, and I thought there was a false, affected note in
the hilarity of the ringsters, and for effect. I was known to two
of the trio, but managed to overhear any conversation which was
adrift. After dinner and over fragrant cigars, they reared their
feet high on an outer gallery, and the inference could be easily
drawn that a contract, unless it involved millions, was beneath
their notice.
Morris informed me that his employer's suspicions were aroused,
and that he had that morning demanded a settlement in full or the
immediate release of the herd. They had laughed the matter off as
a mere incident that would right itself at the proper time, and
flashed as references a list of congressmen, senators, and
bankers galore. But Morris's employer had stood firm in his
contentions, refusing to be overawed by flattery or empty
promises. What would be the result remained to be seen, and the
foreman and myself wandered aimlessly around town during the
afternoon, meeting other trail bosses, nearly all of whom had
heard more or less about the existing trouble. That we had the
sympathy of the cattle interests on our side goes without saying,
and one of them, known as "the kidgloved foreman," a man in the
employ of Shanghai Pierce, invoked the powers above to witness
what would happen if he were in Lovell's boots. This was my first
meeting with the picturesque trail boss, though I had heard of
him often and found him a trifle boastful but not a bad fellow.
He distinguished himself from others of his station on the trail
by always wearing white shirts, kid gloves, riding-boots, inlaid
spurs, while a heavy silver chain was wound several times round a
costly sombrero in lieu of a hatband. We spent an hour or more
together, drinking sparingly, and at parting he begged that I
would assure my employer that he sympathized with him and was at
his command.
The afternoon was waning when I hunted up my outfit and started
them for camp. With one or two exceptions, the boys were broke
and perfectly willing to go. Morris and I joined them at the
livery where they had left their horses, and together we started
out of town. Ordering them to ride on to camp, and saying that I
expected to return by way of Bob Quirk's wagon, Morris and myself
stopped at the court-house. Sheriff Phillips was in his office
and recognized us both at a glance. "Well, she's working," said
he, "and I'll probably have some word for you late this evening.
Yes, one of the local attorneys for your friends came in and we
figured everything up. He thought that if this office would throw
off a certain per cent. of its expense, and Reed would knock off
the interest, his clients would consent to a settlement. I told
him to go right back and tell his people that as long as they
thought that way, it would only cost them one hundred and forty
dollars every twenty-four hours. The lawyer was back within
twenty minutes, bringing a draft, covering every item, and urged
me to have it accepted by wire. The bank was closed, but I found
the cashier in a poker-game and played his hand while he went
over to the depot and sent the message. The operator has orders
to send a duplicate of the answer to this office, and the moment
I get it, if favorable, I'll send a deputy with the news over to
the North Fork. Tell Reed that I think the check's all right this
time, but we'll stand pat until we know for a certainty. We'll
get an answer by morning sure.''
The message was hailed with delight at Bob Quirk's wagon. On
nearing the river, Morris rode by way of the herd to ask the
deputies in charge to turn the cattle up the river towards his
camp. Several of the foreman's men were waiting at my brother's
wagon, and on Morris's return he ordered his outfit to meet the
beeves the next morning and be in readiness to receive them back.
Our foremen were lying around temporary headquarters, and as we
were starting for our respective camps for the night, Lovell
suggested that we hold our outfits all ready to move out with the
herds on an hour's notice. Accordingly the next morning, I
refused every one leave of absence, and gave special orders to
the cook and horse-wrangler to have things in hand to start on an
emergency order. Jim Flood had agreed to wait for me, and we
would recross the river together and hear the report from the
sheriff's office. Forrest and Sponsilier rode up about the same
time we arrived at his wagon, and all four of us set out for
headquarters across the North Fork. The sun was several hours
high when we reached the wagon, and learned that an officer had
arrived during the night with a favorable answer, that the cattle
had been turned over to Morris without a count, and that the
deputies had started for town at daybreak.
"Well, boys," said Lovell, as we came in after picketing our
horses, "Reed, here, wins out, but we're just as much at sea as
ever. I've looked the situation over from a dozen different
viewpoints, and the only thing to do is graze across country and
tender our cattle at Fort Buford. It's my nature to look on the
bright side of things, and yet I'm old enough to know that
justice, in a world so full of injustice, is a rarity. By
allowing the earnest-money paid at Dodge to apply, some kind of a
compromise might be effected, whereby I could get rid of two of
these herds, with three hundred saddle horses thrown back on my
hands at the Yellowstone River. I might dispose of the third herd
here and give the remuda away, but at a total loss of at least
thirty thousand dollars on the Buford cattle. But then there's my
bond to The Western Supply Company, and if this herd of Morris's
fails to respond on the day of delivery, I know who will have to
make good. An Indian uprising, or the enforcement of quarantine
against Texas fever, or any one of a dozen things might tie up
the herd, and September the 15th come and go and no beef offered
on the contract. I've seen outfits start out and never get
through with the chuck-wagon, even. Sutton's advice is good;
we'll tender the cattle. There is a chance that we'll get turned
down, but if we do, I have enough indemnity money in my
possession to temper the wind if the day of delivery should prove
a chilly one to us. I think you had all better start in the
morning."
The old man's review of the situation was a rational one, in
which Jim Reed and the rest of us concurred. Several of the
foremen, among them myself, were anxious to start at once, but
Lovell urged that we kill a beef before starting and divide it up
among the six outfits. He also proposed to Flood that they go
into town during the afternoon and freely announce our departure
in the morning, hoping to force any issue that might be
smouldering in the enemy's camp. The outlook for an early
departure was hailed with delight by the older foremen, and we
younger and more impulsive ones yielded. The cook had orders to
get up something extra for dinner, and we played cards and
otherwise lounged around until the midday meal was announced as
ready. A horse had been gotten up for Lovell to ride and was on
picket, all the relieved men from the attached herd were at Bob's
wagon for dinner, and jokes and jollity graced the occasion. But
near the middle of the noon repast, some one sighted a mounted
man coming at a furious pace for the camp, and shortly the
horseman dashed up and inquired for Lovell. We all arose, when
the messenger dismounted and handed my employer a letter. Tearing
open the missive, the old man read it and turned ashy pale. The
message was from Mike Sutton, stating that a fourth member of the
ring had arrived during the forenoon, accompanied by a United
States marshal from the federal court at Omaha; that the officer
was armed with an order of injunctive relief; that he had
deputized thirty men whom Tolleston had gathered, and proposed
taking possession of the two herds in question that afternoon.
"Like hell they will," said Don Lovell, as he started for his
horse. His action was followed by every man present, including
the one-armed guest, and within a few minutes thirty men swung
into saddles, subject to orders. The camps of the two herds at
issue were about four and five miles down and across the river,
and no doubt Tolleston knew of their location, as they were only
a little more than an hour's ride from Ogalalla. There was no
time to be lost, and as we hastily gathered around the old man,
he said: "Ride for your outfits, boys, and bring along every man
you can spare. We'll meet north of the river about midway between
Quince's and Tom's camps. Bring all the cartridges you have, and
don't spare your horses going or coming."
Priest's wagon was almost on a line with mine, though south of
the river. Fortunately I was mounted on one of the best horses in
my string, and having the farthest to go, shook the kinks out of
him as old Paul and myself tore down the mesa. After passing The
Rebel's camp, I held my course as long as the footing was solid,
but on encountering the first sand, crossed the river nearly
opposite the appointed rendezvous. The North Platte was fordable
at any point, flowing but a midsummer stage of water, with
numerous wagon crossings, its shallow channel being about one
hundred yards wide. I reined in my horse for the first time near
the middle of the stream, as the water reached my saddle-skirts;
when I came out on the other side, Priest and his boys were not a
mile behind me. As I turned down the river, casting a backward
glance, squads of horsemen were galloping in from several
quarters and joining a larger one which was throwing up clouds of
dust like a column of cavalry. In making a cut-off to reach my
camp, I crossed a sand dune from which I sighted the marshal's
posse less than two miles distant. My boys were gambling among
themselves, not a horse under saddle, and did not notice my
approach until I dashed up. Three lads were on herd, but the
rest, including the wrangler, ran for their mounts on picket,
while Parent and myself ransacked the wagon for ammunition.
Fortunately the supply of the latter was abundant, and while
saddles were being cinched on horses, the cook and I divided the
ammunition and distributed it among the men. The few minutes'
rest refreshed my horse, but as we dashed away, the boys yelling
like Comanches, the five-mile ride had bested him and he fell
slightly behind. As we turned into the open valley, it was a
question if we or the marshal would reach the stream first; he
had followed an old wood road and would strike the river nearly
opposite Forrest's camp. The horses were excited and straining
every nerve, and as we neared our crowd the posse halted on the
south side and I noticed a conveyance among them in which were
seated four men. There was a moment's consultation held, when the
posse entered the water and began fording the stream, the vehicle
and its occupants remaining on the other side. We had halted in a
circle about fifty yards back from the river-bank, and as the
first two men came out of the water, Don Lovell rode forward
several lengths of his horse, and with his hand motioned to them
to halt. The leaders stopped within easy speaking distance, the
remainder of the posse halting in groups at their rear, when
Lovell demanded the meaning of this demonstration.
An inquiry and answer followed identifying the speakers. "In
pursuance of an order from the federal court of this
jurisdiction," continued the marshal, "I am vested with authority
to take into my custody two herds, numbering nearly seven
thousand beeves, now in your possession, and recently sold to
Field, Radcliff & Co. for government purposes. I propose to
execute my orders peaceably, and any interference on your part
will put you and your men in contempt of government authority. If
resistance is offered, I can, if necessary, have a company of
United States cavalry here from Fort Logan within forty-eight
hours to enforce the mandates of the federal court. Now my advice
to you would be to turn these cattle over without further
controversy."
"And my advice to you," replied Lovell, "is to go back to your
federal court and tell that judge that as a citizen of these
United States, and one who has borne arms in her defense, I
object to having snap judgment rendered against me. If the
honorable court which you have the pleasure to represent is
willing to dispossess me of my property in favor of a ring of
government thieves, and on only hearing one side of the question,
then consider me in contempt. I'll gladly go back to Omaha with
you, but you can't so much as look at a hoof in my possession.
Now call your troops, or take me with you for treating with scorn
the orders of your court."
Meanwhile every man on our side had an eye on Archie Tolleston,
who had gradually edged forward until his horse stood beside that
of the marshal. Before the latter could frame a reply to Lovell's
ultimatum, Tolleston said to the federal officer:
"Didn't my employers tell you that the old --- -- - ---- would
defy you without a demonstration of soldiers at your back? Now,
the laugh's on you, and--"
"No, it's on you," interrupted a voice at my back, accompanied by
a pistol report. My horse jumped forward, followed by a fusillade
of shots behind me, when the hireling deputies turned and plunged
into the river. Tolleston had wheeled his horse, joining the
retreat, and as I brought my six-shooter into action and was in
the act of leveling on him, he reeled from the saddle, but clung
to the neck of his mount as the animal dashed into the water. I
held my fire in the hope that he would right in the saddle and
afford me a shot, but he struck a swift current, released his
hold, and sunk out of sight. Above the din and excitement of the
moment, I heard a voice which I recognized as Reed's, shouting,
"Cut loose on that team, boys! blaze away at those harness
horses!" Evidently the team had been burnt by random firing, for
they were rearing and plunging, and as I fired my first shot at
them, the occupants sprang out of the vehicle and the team ran
away. A lull occurred in the shooting, to eject shells and refill
cylinders, which Lovell took advantage of by ordering back a
number of impulsive lads, who were determined to follow up the
fleeing deputies.
"Come back here, you rascals, and stop this shooting!" shouted
the old man. "Stop it, now, or you'll land me in a federal prison
for life! Those horsemen may be deceived. When federal courts can
be deluded with sugar-coated blandishments, ordinary men ought to
be excusable."
Six-shooters were returned to their holsters. Several horses and
two men on our side had received slight flesh wounds, as there
had been a random return fire. The deputies halted well out of
pistol range, covering the retreat of the occupants of the
carriage as best they could, but leaving three dead horses in
plain view. As we dropped back towards Forrest's wagon, the team
in the mean time having been caught, those on foot were picked up
and given seats in the conveyance. Meanwhile a remuda of horses
and two chuck-wagons were sighted back on the old wood road, but
a horseman met and halted them and they turned back for Ogalalla.
On reaching our nearest camp, the posse south of the river had
started on their return, leaving behind one of their number in
the muddy waters of the North Platte.
Late that evening, as we were preparing to leave for our
respective camps, Lovell said to the assembled foremen: "Quince
will take Reed and me into Ogalalla about midnight. If Sutton
advises it, all three of us will go down to Omaha and try and
square things. I can't escape a severe fine, but what do I care
as long as I have their money to pay it with? The killing of that
fool boy worries me more than a dozen fines. It was uncalled for,
too, but he would butt in, and you fellows were all itching for
the chance to finger a trigger. Now the understanding is that you
all start in the morning."